1st Edition

Chance and Error The Theory of Evolution

By Marsh Hopkins Copyright 1923
    238 Pages
    by Routledge

    238 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1923 Chance and Error examines the vagaries of chance, and how this is the result of the interference of yes and no. The book basis its examination of chance on the idea of a two-sided coin. The book stipulates that contradictories are head and tail, or yes and no. When the coin is flipped in the air yes normally wins half of the trials, but this includes half of the half that normally go to no. Thus, normally in one quarter of the trials there is an interference of yes and no. From this the chance of any number of heads or tails can be easily calculated, and all results that are attained by more difficult mathematics are secured. The book uses this idea to examine interference of yes and no in everyday life and argues that this causes the variations in everything that goes on around us in nature and in our daily life. This book will be of interest to philosophers of logic, as well as mathematicians.

    1. Propositions

    2. Games Whose Expectation in 0

    3. Direct Oberservations

    4. Indirect Observations

    5. Statistics

    6. Target Practice

    7. Errors in Three Dimensions

    8. Monte Carlo

    9. Variable Chance

    10. Sorts

    11. Miscellaneous

    Index

    Biography

    Marsh Hopkins